The 600 seats were completely filled inside LACMA's Bing Theater with tons of people on standby hoping to grab a straggling seat. No phones or recordings were allowed in the theater.

Caplan channeled her best Honey Bunny in the opening scene at the diner, with Hill as Pumpkin, sans London accent. "Any of you fucking pricks move, and I'll execute every motherfucking last one of ya!" screamed Caplan, just as Amanda Plummer did in the film. The audience broke out in cheers.

From then, the live read really took off. Pierce played gangster Marsellus Wallace and Rogen took the role as Lance, Vincent Vega's drug dealer.

Gordon-Levitt read the role of Vincent, sounding almost identical to John Travolta and Peele took on Samuel L. Jackson's character Jules. Both actors wore black suites and black ties, reminiscent to the iconic attire in the movie.

Chiklis received laughs from the crowd when he took to the mic as scared and timid Brett, who gets shot by Jules and Vincent. Chiklis fake cried, trembled, and even jolted in his seat pretending to be "shot" to death as Brett did on screen.

Chiklis also had a long and well-received monologue as Captain Koons. In the movie, Koons is played by Christopher Walken and explains to Butch, read by Hill, that he's been hiding Butch's father's gold watch in his rectum for two years.

Chiklis said, with the same Texas accent and waving his own watch, "So he hid it in the one place he knew he could hide somethin'. His ass." Rogen cracked up.

Another scene-stealer came from Gordon-Levitt and Caplan at Jackrabbit Slim's.

Caplan, this time as Uma Thurman's Mia Wallace, faked doing a big line of coke just like Mia did off the bathroom sink in the film. "I said goddamn!" Caplan shouted.

"You Never Can Tell" by Chuck Berry filled the theater as the two actors rose from their seats and reenacted the famous twist contest scene from the movie. Their improvised dancing made the crowd go wild.

And who knew Rebecca Romijn was bi-accented? The actress switched from Colombian cab driver Esmarelda to Butch's French girlfriend Fabienne.

"Can we make spoons?" Romijn said in her soft baby voice and French accent.

Hill also improvised with the French language. "Sacre bleu," he said during the fight scene with Marsellus, and then laughed at his own attempt to speak French.

Throughout the performance Kroll had parts as English Dave, the manager at the diner, the boxing trainer, and the character Marvin. But, he really got the audience's attention when he took it upon himself to read aloud the giggles and grunts made by the Gimp.

Rogen and Kroll had the crowd rolling with their chemistry during the back-and-forth dialogue as hillbillies Maynard and Zed.

"Whoa, this boy's got a bit of fight in 'em!" said Rogen. "You wanna fight? You wanna fight? Good, I like to fight!" Kroll followed in the same hillbilly accent. Enter laughs from the entire panel.

The rest of the script was read with Chiklis as The Wolf and Rogen as Jimmy.

The live read ended with a standing ovation and "Surf Rider" playing while the crowd filed out of the theater.

Just as Vincent said to Jules in the last scene, "I think we oughtta leave now."

"That's probably a good idea."

(Pictured: Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Jordan Peele, Michael Chiklis and Seth Rogen at the Film Independent Live Read of "Pulp Fiction" directed by Evan Goldberg)